Charlie was found underwater in a 1.4m deep lagoon by children at Bosworth Water Park in Leicestershire in July last year.

Smith, 36, had denied any wrongdoing over Charlie's death but he changed his plea during his trial.

Prosecutor Mary Prior QC said Charlie had been "left alone in a busy park at five years old in circumstances where there was a clear and obvious risk that he might come to very serious harm leading to his death".

She said Smith and Charlie's mother, Lynsey Dunn, had shown "ingrained and entrenched indifference" and "a gross failure to supervise not for seconds, and not for a few minutes, but for protracted periods of time".

The jury had been told that on the day Charlie died, Smith was shouting: "For f***s sake, we're ready to go. I don't know where he f****** is."

Charlie was discovered by an 11-year-old, who reportedly felt his hairas he was searching for his goggles. The woman who attempted to resuscitate him said it was the most "heartbreaking" thing she had ever done.

Charlie's mother admitted to multiple charges of neglect, in separate incidents to the death of her son.

The 28-year-old admitted to a charge connected to failing to supervise Charlie in an incident between 2014 and 2016, which resulted in the child being found in a pedal car next to a busy road.

She also pleaded guilty to another charge of neglect relating to another child, who could not be named, in the summer of 2015.